Welcome to the Bob Brader Blog!
This blog scares the Hell out of me! However, I have been trying to battle as many fears as I possibly can.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Church: A section that was originally in Spitting In The Face Of The Devil



I was going to church every Sunday with my grandparents and I was in my second year of catechism classes.  My family did not have much money.  Well, let me put that a bit differently, my mom and I did not have much money.  My father would actually hide money from my mom.  He hid money all over the house.  It was what he called his Bingo money and at this time he was going to Bingo about four or five times a week.  My mom took to making clothing for me.  All of the other kids in catechism classes wore suits, and I was sitting there in handmade multicolored overalls with a turtleneck shirt.  I thought I looked fine, but the other kids nicknamed me Farmer Brown, and told me more then once that I was too poor to go to their church.  I usually just ignored them.  I was an acolyte and loved being up front with Reverend Cell as he gave the sermon.  My parents had even given me a Bible for Christmas the year before.  This Bible was unlike any of the ones the other kid’s had because this one had pictures.  Not cartoon pictures, but actual pictures of Egypt, and what the areas looked like.  I loved it.  It did not go over well in the classroom.  Again I was the freak, only this time not only did the kids think so, but so did the teacher.  When he saw the Bible all he could say to me was: “This is not a real Bible.” 
“What makes mine different?” 
“Real Bibles don’t have pictures.” 
“But the words are the same.” 
“It’s not a real Bible, I don’t care if the words are the same or not.  I want you to get one just like everyone else has.” 
“I’m sorry, but I don’t see a difference.” 
“You can either get the things that are needed for this class, or you can leave.”
I was a bit confused; here I was learning about love and understanding in a place that had none. 
But the last straw came when the teacher handed out these books with all of these Bible stories in them and at the end of each chapter was a blank page with the heading: What Do You Believe?  We finished the first story and he started to tell us what to write in that section.  Again I was confused and I asked, “What if you don’t believe that is what the story is saying?”
He looked at me and said: “Then you don’t belong here.” 
I got up and walked out.  No one was going to tell me how to think.  The only problem was, I did not want to hurt my grandparents or my great grandmother.  They were set on me going to church and getting confirmed.  My Mom was not a churchgoer, so she didn’t care and my father was an atheist.  He would say: “Well, if you feel that you need to believe in that, then you go right ahead.”  So, I decided not to tell anyone of my decision to stop going to catechism classes.  I would get dropped off at the church, and go to the restaurant down the street, have breakfast and then go back to church to meet my grandparents.  This was fine for a few weeks, until one of the kids told the teacher that they saw me in church the Sunday before.  They wanted to have this big meeting and I just decided it was not worth it.  I told my grandparents and my great-grandmother that I was not going to be confirmed.  They were disappointed.  I think it was the first time I really let them down.  The really bad part was I didn’t care if I let them down or not.  I was starting to feel that the only people I could really count on were my mom and myself.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Preparation Hex

This is the opening from my second monologue "Preparation Hex"
2:45

It's 2:45 in the afternoon when it hits me. I’m sitting at my desk at work and I cannot move. I know if I even try to lift a finger, I am going to start crying and I’m not going to be able to stop. 

Triggered by Bonnie Tyler’s “Total Eclipse of the Heart” playing on our office radio, my mind starts some kind of chain reaction and decides that this would be the perfect time to replay the entire breakup of Polly and I. It’s like a movie trailer that shows you way too much of the film.
Fade in: on the day before the incident, two weeks before Thanksgiving. Polly and I are holding each other watching "The Panic Room" on DVD.
Cut to: the next day. I come home and she is on the couch crying. “You want to move out? Why? You don’t know?”
Pan to: me sleeping on the couch.
Quick cuts: Thanksgiving and Christmas which are nothing for me. I'm saving every dime I can to find an apartment.
Fade up: on the empty basement studio apartment I finally find and put a deposit on.
Cut to: “Polly, I found an apartment today and I will be moving out on the 18th.”
“Oh my God, I just found a place today on my way home from work. I put a deposit on it. It’s on 20th Avenue.”
“Where on 20th Avenue?”
Whip pan: “That's my place, right there.”
“Really? That’s mine.”
Three doors away.
Jump cut: Polly and I get one truck and help each other move into our new places.
Multiple images: of Polly and I seeing each other almost every day. We make love more now then we did when we were living together.
The images shatter.
Polly is sick, fever of 103. I help her to the doctor and she stays at my place while she's recovering, and two extra months after she feels better.

Blend into: our trip to Atlantic City. My God, she is beautiful. We make love at the Holiday Inn.
Fade up: on my empty basement studio apartment. Polly has stopped coming by.
Cut to: two weeks ago. It's Christmas time. Polly comes over, first time I've seen her in months. We exchange gifts and then she tells me about Paul.
“Paul is just like you. You guys would get along great. I have never felt this way about anyone. He really swept me off my feet.”
Just then her cell phone goes off. It's Paul and at the end of that call she says: “I love you.”
I feel a tear streak down my face.
I am numb.
Oh my God, I'm still at work.
I go in and tell my boss that I'm not feeling well and I need to leave. I grab my stuff and I am out the door.
My caring, nurturing inner monologue takes over at that moment. “OK Bob, just put one foot in front of the other, good, good. OK now, take out your metro card, thatta boy. Now get on the train, good, good. Think about anything except the fact that your whole life is falling apart, good, good.”

Finally I make it to my stop, get into my apartment and fall on the bed. But I don’t seem to land. I just keep falling further and further down into a pit of despair.
I had done the same thing with my relationship with Polly that I had done with alcohol, sex, even acting years before. I submerged myself in it, and as long as that relationship was alive, I wasn’t a failure, I wasn’t a loser, and because of that, I loved her and resented her at the same time.
Being with Polly helped me squelch my father’s criticizing and demeaning voice in my head that I had tried for so many years to drown out in so many different ways. Without that relationship, his voice came back with a searing vengeance.
I was in bed for three days straight, crying about everything. It wasn’t about losing her, it was about feeling that I was worth absolutely nothing.

If you would like to read the entire play, it can be found on Indie Theatre Now:
http://www.indietheaternow.com/Play/preparation-hex